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javascript lightweight basic tools for node.js and browser
"This is my rifle. There are many others like it, but this one is mine."
npm i a-toolbox --save
const tools = require('a-toolbox')
tools.string.trim('({cut these brackets please)}', ['{', '}', '(', ')'])
// > 'cut these brackets please'
modular import
const tools = {
string: require('a-toolbox/string'),
fs: require('a-toolbox/fs')
}
<script src="node_modules/a-toolbox/dist/atoolbox.min.js"></script>
<script>
var data = {
name: 'Alice',
year: 2014,
color: 'purple'
};
var str = '<div>My name is {name} I was born in {year} and my favourite color is {color}</div>{nothing}';
console.log('template:', tools.string.template(str, data));
//> template: <div>My name is Alice I was born in 2014 and my favourite color is purple</div>{nothing}
</script>
remove an element from array it removes only the first occurrence
Example
let a = ['js','ruby','python']
tools.array.remove(a, 'ruby')
// > a = ['js','python']
remove an element from array at position
Example
let a = [1,2,3]
tools.array.removeAt(a, 0)
// > a = [2,3]
get last element of array or undefined
Example
tools.array.last([1,2,3])
// > 3
get nth element of array
Example
tools.array.at([1,2,3], 0)
// > 1
get first element of array or undefined
Example
tools.array.first([1,2,3])
// > 1
check if array contains an element
Example
tools.array.contains([1,2,3], 1)
// > true
insert an item into array at index position
Example
let a = ['john','alice','bob']
tools.array.insert(a, 0, 'mary')
// > a = ['mary', 'john', 'alice', 'bob']
concat arrays
Example
tools.array.concat([0,1,2],[3,4,5])
// > [0,1,2,3,4,5]
empty array - need to keep references
Example
let a = [0,1,2]
tools.array.empty(a)
// > a = []
push item into array, optionally check if already exists
Example
let a = [0,1,2,3]
tools.array.add(a, 3, true)
// > a = [0,1,2,3]
creates a new array with all sub-array elements concatted into it recursively like Array.prototype.flatten()
Example
let a = [0,[1,2],[3]] >
tools.array.flat(a)
// > [0,1,2,3]
Example
let a = [0,1,2,10,11,20]
tools.array.sortingInsert(a, 15)
// > a = [0,1,2,10,11,15,20]
array <Array<*>>
item <*>
return: number index of element of -1 like Array.indexOf but perform binary search (array should be sorted)
Example
tools.array.binaryIndexOf([0,1,2,3], 0)
// > 0
note: not available on browser
replace deprecated fs.exists
Example
tools.fs.exists('/tmp/file')
// > true
create an empty file if not exists
Example
tools.fs.touch('/tmp/touch-me')
delete file, optionally in safe mode
Example
tools.fs.unlink('/tmp/file')
Generate hash using sha256 in hex format
Example
tools.hash.sha256('usk6fgbuygbu6')
// > 'ee42f619919727584b66fe25248ed4bba8e87dcfb3e62a90143ea17ba48df58e'
flat keys in object
Example
tools.object.flat({ a: { a1: 1, a2: 2 }, b: 3 })
// > { 'a.a1': 1, 'a.a2': 2, 'b': 3 }
merge b into a
Example
let a = {a:1,b:'ciao'}
tools.object.merge(a, {a:4,c:{d:8,e:9}})
// > a = { a: 4, b: 'ciao', c: { d: 8, e: 9 } }
Clone an array or an object in input
Example
tools.object.clone({a: 1, b: 'ciao'})
// > {a: 1, b: 'ciao'}
obj <Object>
return: Array<string>
Example
tools.object.getKeys({a: () => { }, b: 1, c: 'ciao'})
// > ['a','b','c']
it use Object.getOwnPropertyNames
to inherits child from parent, without prototype
Example
let a = {}
tools.object.inherits(a, {f0:() => { },p1:1,p2:'ciao'})
// > a = {f0: () => { }, p1: 1, p2: 'ciao'}
empty object - need to keep references
Example
let a = {a:0,b:1,c:2,d:[],e:{f:-1}}
tools.object.empty(a)
// > a = {}
restore flat object
Example
tools.object.raise({ 'a.a1': 1, 'a.a2': 2, 'b': 3 })
// > { a: { a1: 1, a2: 2 }, b: 3 }
get value in object using a flat key
Example
tools.object.getByFlatKey({ a: { b: {c: 1} } }, 'a.b.c')
// > 1
set value in object using a flat key
Example
let a = {}
tools.object.setByFlatKey(a, 'a.b.c', 1)
// > a = { a: { b: {c: 1} } }
check if val
is setted, means it's not null
or undefined
check if you are on browser or not
replace placeholders inside graph brackets {} with obj dictionary ~ES6 template string without $
Example
tools.string.template('hi {name} how are you?', {name: 'Alice'})
// > 'hi Alice how are you?'
trim string
Example
tools.string.trim(' regular trim ')
// > 'regular trim'
Example
tools.string.replaceAll('abcadaeafaga', 'a', '')
// > 'bcdefg'
str <string>
return: string
Example
tools.string.capitalize('alice')
// > 'Alice'
prefix <string>
str <string>
return: string
Example
tools.string.prependMissing('miss ', 'Alice')
// > 'miss Alice'
get random int from 0 to max
Example
tools.random.rnd(10)
// > 5
get random int from min to max
Example
tools.random.number(10, 20)
// > 11
get random string
Example
tools.random.string(8)
// > 'ajdsfchakwt'
get random hex string
Example
tools.random.hex(8)
// > '1bc956bf'
get random hash string
Example
tools.random.hash()
// > '1f8a690b7366a2323e2d5b045120da7e93896f471f8a690b731f8a690b739ab5'
get random element from array
Example
tools.random.element([1,2,3,4,5])
// > 1
note: not available on browser
check if running user is root
start a timer identified by tag
Example
tools.time.chrono.set('query')
reset the timer identified by tag
Example
tools.time.chrono.reset('query')
discard the timer identified by tag
Example
tools.time.chrono.clear('query')
get the timer in ms from start (or reset) identified by tag
Example
tools.time.chrono.get('query')
// > 11
clear timers (if you care about memory)
Example
const tasks = new tools.task.Worker({done: () => { console.log('well done') }})
const _asyncOperationTimeout = [500, 1000, 200, 1500, 100];
for (const i in _asyncOperationTimeout) {
_tasks.todo('task#' + i);
}
for (const i in _asyncOperationTimeout) {
setTimeout(function (i) {
return function () {
console.log('done task #', i);
_tasks.done('task#' + i);
};
}(i), _asyncOperationTimeout[i]);
}
add task
Example
tasks.todo('task#1')
declare task it's done
Example
tasks.todo('task#1')
simple event emitter
Example
const emitter = new tools.event.Emitter()
emitter.on('event#0', (value0, value1) => {
console.log('event #0 happened with', value0, value1)
})
emitter.once('event#0', (value0, value1) => {
console.log('event #0 happened (once) with', value0, value1)
})
emitter.emit('event#0', 1, 2)
emitter.emit('event#0', 3, 4)
emitter.off('event#0')
emit an event
Example
event.emit('event#0', 'a value', 99, {another: 'VALUE'})
listen to an event
Example
emitter.on('event#0', (value0, value1) => {
console.log('event #0 happened (once) with', value0, value1)
})
listen to an event only once
Example
emitter.once('event#0', (value0, value1) => {
console.log('event #0 happened (once) with', value0, value1)
})
stop listening to an event
Example
emitter.off('event#0')
v. 1.5.1
string.template
support multi-level syntax objectv. 1.5.1
object.setByFlatKey
support also Arrayv. 1.5.0
event.Emitter
(simple event emitter, for browser)v. 1.2.0
crypto
(for browser)v. 1.0.0
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2015-2018, braces lab
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
FAQs
javascript lightweight basic tools for node.js and browser
The npm package a-toolbox receives a total of 197 weekly downloads. As such, a-toolbox popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that a-toolbox demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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